44122_binw 09-12-2004 13:35 Pagina 1 Europe. A Beautiful Idea? The Debate on the Idea of Europe by the Dutch EU Presidency 2004. A Series of Conferences organized by the Nexus Institute. 44122_binw 09-12-2004 13:35 Pagina 2 2 Disclaimer Ministries of General and Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands: Check against delivery.The information is this document is a summary/ interpretation and not a verbatim of the speakers. The Ministries of General and Foreign Affairs do not guarantee that the content of this document is in conformity with the letter and spirit of the various contributions to this debate. Unauthorised use disclosure or copying is strictly prohibited. 44122_binw 09-12-2004 13:35 Pagina 3 Contents 1. Preface. Bridges between Values and Policy Dr. Jan Peter Balkenende . 05 2. Introduction. Speaking of Europe. In Retrospect Rob Riemen . 07 3. Realising the Idea of Europe. Ten Conclusions for the Political Leaders of the European Union . 11 4. List of Participants . 15 5. Opening Conference ‘The Politics of European Values’, The Hague, 7 September 2004 . 17 3 6. Working Conference ‘The Idea of Europe, Past, Present and Future’, Warsaw,1 to 3 October 2004 . 27 7. Working Conference ‘Living European Values:Arts and Education’, Berlin, 22 to 24 October 2004 . 35 8. Working Conference ‘Civilisation and Power: Freedom and Democracy’, Washington, Library of Congress, 18 to 20 November 2004 . 45 9. Closing conference ‘Europe. A Beautiful Idea?’, Rotterdam, 4 December 2004 . 57 44122_binw 09-12-2004 13:35 Pagina 4 4 44122_binw 09-12-2004 13:35 Pagina 5 1. Preface – Bridges between Values and Policy Dr. Jan Peter Balkenende, President of the European Council What is the significance and political relevance of the idea of Europe? How can we revitalise the core European values for the citizens of Europe? What can we do to make these values a powerful inspiration for the politics of the European Union? Europe is more than a market and a currency. It is becoming increasingly clear that the intangible aspect of European integration has been neglected for too long.With European values like freedom, respect and solidarity under attack from extremists, with tensions flaring up between various communities and with many individuals lukewarm about the EU, we need to spotlight and discuss that intangible aspect of Europe. On behalf of the Dutch Presidency, the Nexus Institute has organised a series of international conferences on European values and their significance for our future. A few hundred prominent thinkers and decision-makers participated in debates on this subject in The Hague, 5 Warsaw, Berlin,Washington and Rotterdam. In these debates special attention was paid to building bridges between values and policy. What follows are the results of the conferences. I hope that they will find their place in subsequent Presidencies and that the ideas they have generated will be used as building blocks for future policy, on a national level and by the European Commission, Council and Parliament.This is necessary. Making European values explicit and encouraging an ongoing dialogue about what Europe stands for is crucial for the Union’s vitality and effectiveness. This project couldn’t have materialised without the Nexus Institute and the many participants from all over the world. Let me thank them for their work and inspiration. 44122_binw 09-12-2004 13:35 Pagina 6 6 44122_binw 09-12-2004 13:35 Pagina 7 2. Introduction - Speaking of Europe In Retrospect Rob Riemen, Founder and Director of the Nexus Institute I. To explain what it is to be a European, one has no need of long stories. A brief anecdote will do. In 1934,Thomas Mann was faced with the task of writing an In Memoriam for a man who had been like a father to him: Samuel Fischer, the Berlin publisher of Hungarian-Jewish descent who probably did more than anyone else to make it possible for Mann to write. Mann recalled the following exchange, which took place during his final visit with Fischer, who was already ill at the time. Fischer was talking about a common acquaintance: – Kein Europäer, sagte er kopfschüttelnd. – Kein Europäer, Herr Fischer, wieso denn nicht? – Von großen humanen Ideen versteht er nichts. 7 *** Great humane ideas, that is the European ideal of civilization.This ideal is based on the insight that our true identity lies not in that which distinguishes us from others, but in that which connects all humans, which is its universal essence. Because we all have a spirit, we all know about freedom, peace, justice, compassion, love and beauty, we all know the difference between good and evil, truth and falsity. It is from these same values that we draw our human dignity, it is because of these values that each human being – because he is a human being – has the right to our respect. It is on this foundation that the great humane ideas have grown to fruition. An ethical ideal. Descent, social status, gender, tradition, power, wealth, all material and external manifestations, are only part of what constitutes our identity. Who we truly are, what we truly represent, is determined solely and exclusively by the extent to which we live up to the highest spiritual and moral values. An ideal of freedom.Values and virtues cannot be imposed. Only in freedom can an individual attempt to make these his own. A political ideal.The universality of law and the separation of the political estates, human rights and democracy, as the best guarantee for our individual liberty. A social ideal. Every individual counts.We are our brother’s keeper. A cultural ideal. Only culture, the works of poets and thinkers, prophets and artists, can teach us values, provide us with insight, refine our taste, train us in the cultivation of the human soul and spirit so that a human being can be more than what he is as well: an animal. A humanistic ideal. Man is pivotal: sentient man, who knows the world of the mind; doubting man, who knows that there is no final knowledge; tragic man, who is aware of his limitations yet does not lose his sense of humour. A cosmopolitan ideal.The free world is comprised of all those differences in language, culture, tradition, religion and opinion, and of the limitless diversity of forms assumed by our universal values. A European will therefore be cosmopolitan, will learn languages, remain open to 44122_binw 09-12-2004 13:35 Pagina 8 others, enter into dialogues with other cultures and traditions in a never-ending attempt to triumph over his own limitations. His own cultural identity – the mother tongue and culture with which he grew up – forms the basis for further development, not a reason to stand still. A progressive ideal.Times changes, and we change with the time.Traditions cannot do without rejuvenation, and the truth about our lives must be sought after again and again. All supreme values demand a quest. History can teach us, but the ideal of civilization belongs to the future and not to a nonexistent past. An ideal of civilization. For it attempts to answer the two questions with which every form of civilization begins: How are we to live? What is a good society? A European adheres to these grand humane ideas and feels at home in the collective memory of European culture in which those ideas have assumed a form, a story, an expression. Despite all their differences, this is the common mark of the greatest Europeans: of Erasmus and Voltaire, Montaigne and Spinoza,Thomas Mann and Czeslaw Milosz, Kafka and Pessoa, Nadezhda Mandelstam, of Cristina Campo and Marguerite Yourcenar. Being European is an attitude towards life, a choice.Yet,even in his day, Socrates was 8 confronted with the fact that this choice is anything but an obvious one. In the person of Callicles, he met with an opponent who claimed that man’s essence lay not in spiritual values, but in the nature of humans themselves. In accordance with the laws of nature, the principle of ‘might makes right’ applies, and the most important thing in life is to gratify our senses. ‘Natural fairness and justice, I tell you now quite frankly, is this – that he who would live rightly should let his desires be as strong as possible and not chasten them […]. No, in good truth, Socrates – which you claim to be seeking – the fact is this: luxury and licentiousness and liberty, if they have the support of force, are virtue and happiness.’ To which Socrates replies: ‘This, in my opinion, is the mark on which a man should fix his eyes throughout life [...] not letting one's desires go unrestrained and in one's attempts to satisfy them leading the life of a robber. For neither to any of his fellow-men can such a one be dear, not to God; since he cannot commune with any, and where there is no communion, there can be no friendship.And wise men tell us, Callicles, that heaven and earth and gods and men are held together by communion and friendship, by orderliness, temperance, and justice; and that is the reason, my friend, why they call the whole of this world cosmos or order, not disorder or misrule […] Let us, then, take the argument as our guide, which has revealed to us that the best way of life is to practice justice and every virtue in life and death.’ Socrates’ reply is the reply of a European. II. Within the European Union, walls have been razed, nations united, war rendered unimaginable. Peace reigns; welfare, rights and liberties are ensured.
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